No Anti-Incumbency In Chhattisgarh, May Change 1/4th Tickets: BJP Minister

Up to one-fourth election tickets can be changed by the BJP for the upcoming Assembly polls in Chhattisgarh, senior party leader and cabinet minister Brijmohan Agrawal said today, asserting that there is no anti-incumbency against the Raman Singh-led government in the state.

Brushing aside rumours of major differences between him and the chief minister, Mr Agrawal said there may be some differences on certain issues but there are certainly no hard feelings.

“There is no infighting in the party. I have very cordial relations with the chief minister. There are no hard feelings between us, may be our approach is different on some issues,” Mr Agrawal told .

Talking about anti-incumbency, he said there maybe discontent against some individuals and that is why political parties get surveys done ahead of the elections to decide on tickets.

“Twenty-five per cent tickets are likely to be changed in the BJP. I am sure when tickets are changed then people will again be with the BJP. People may be angry with some individuals for different personal reasons but they are not anti-BJP,” Mr Agrawal said.

Elections for 90-member Chhattisgarh Assembly are due this year end.

He made light of the recent tie-up between Ajit Jogi’s Janta Congress Chhattisgarh and Mayawati’s BSP, saying it would not hurt the BJP, which has its voters intact, but would be detrimental to the Congress.

“If the BSP and Ajit Jogi fight elections together, then it is very beneficial for the BJP. The party has got its own support base and voters. Our vote bank is intact. People from all castes and creed are with the BJP due to different development works done by us. We will surely get more votes this time too and form the government,” Mr Agrawal said.

He claimed that Mr Jogi was the B team of the Congress, contrary to his perceived closeness with Raman Singh.

“He (Ajit Jogi) is the B team of the Congress. Congress says this to get rid of its own problem,” the senior minister in the state said.

Citing the dual party system in Chhattisgarh and neighbouring Madhya Pradesh, he said the main fight, if at all that happens, in the Assembly polls will only be between the BJP and the Congress.

“(Ajit) Jogi will only divide some votes. But he won’t be able to take away any result-oriented votes,” said Mr Agrawal, who holds the charge of water resources department, agriculture and biotechnology, animal husbandry and fisheries among others.

He said elections in the state will be fought in the name of Singh and Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

“It is known to everyone now that elections will be fought in the name of Raman Singh and the prime minister. But what will happen in the time to come, that (who will be chief minister) will be decided by the party. And whatever party decides, everyone will have agree to it,” Mr Agrawal said.

He, however, said the BJP is a disciplined party and everyone gets what they deserve. “I have never asked anything from the party. It decides everything after analysing eligibility of individuals,” he said.

Mr Agrawal said the BJP will form its government for the fourth consecutive term in the state.

Poll-bound M P has 5.03 cr voters in final list.

The Election Commission (EC) in Bhopal published the final voters’ list of Madhya Pradesh, where assembly elections are due later this year.

Number of voters in poll-bound Madhya Pradesh has gone up by almost eight per cent to 5.03 crore from 4.66 crore in 2013, state Chief Electoral Officer said Thursday.

The Election Commission (EC) in Bhopal published the final voters’ list of Madhya Pradesh, where assembly elections are due later this year.

“Madhya Pradesh has 5,03,94,086 (5.03 crore) voters in the final list published Thursday. In the 2013 assembly polls, names of 4.66 crore electors were registered. This means there is a rise of about 8 per cent voters in the state since the last assembly elections,” state Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) VL Kantha Rao told reporters.

Of the total registered voters, 2,63,14,957 are males and 2,40,77,719 females.

Rao said a toal of 1410 people have registered themselves under the ‘third gender’ category.

He said a total of 1,37,83,383 voters belonged to the age group of 20-29 years, which is the biggest segment.

“Names of 5.02 crore voters were published in the list released on October 4 last year. Since then, about 96 lakh applications have been received either for amendments or addition of names. A total of 35.71 lakh applicants had sought removal of names whereas 36.13 lakh applicants wanted their names included in the rolls,” he said.

Responding to a query, the CEO said the average cost incurred towards conducting electoral process per voter is Rs 50-60.

“We have sought a budget of Rs 413 crore for the election expenditure which was Rs 152 crore in the 2013 polls,” he said.

Rao said Mahobai (104), a resident of Badnapur village under Nepanagar assembly constituency in Burhanpur district, is the eldest registered voter in Madhya Pradesh who will exercise her franchise for the 14th time.

MSMEs in focus ahead of assembly elections

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The medium, small and micro enterprises in Rajasthan seem to be drawing upon extra focus just ahead of Assembly elections. The industries department has recently announced several clusters and a state-level facilitation centre for the MSME sector. In the sequence investment promotion centres will soon be developed at all districts.

“Budget has been sanctioned to establish such investment facilitation centers at all district level industry center. The objective is to make the department work more as a facilitator and less as a regulator,” Samit Sharma said industry commissioner of Rajasthan.

The industries commissioner informed of the decision during review of the state level facilitation centre that went operational earlier this month. The centre aims to provide one point solution for most queries concerning an MSME investor at state.

There are around 27 lakh MSME units at Rajasthan employing nearly 50 lakh people. The state government has in consideration of the sector declared MSME year from September 2017 to September 2018. The year concludes just days before the model code of conduct is expected to come into force in state and many announcements for the sector have come along in the time.

Impact of the assembly elections is also reflected upon the trade and industry bodies at state. Several events for the sector were held by these bodies over the last one month. “The trade bodies events focuses to bring government and industry representatives on a common platform, it will be difficult to do so once model code of conduct comes in implemented,” said a senior officer at trade body while explaining the urgency.

Meanwhile, despite the government support, the sector continues to face a fiscal crunch. “Though the central and state governments have come out with various MSME financing schemes, MSMEs still find it difficult to meet their short and long term finance requirement. Access to easy and affordable finance is required by MSME to perform as per their potential,” said head of FICCI Rajasthan State Council.

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Election Commission gears up for elections, identifies sensitive booths

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Rajasthan: Chief Electoral Office (CEO) has instructed all the district collectors to ensure adequate deployment of forces at the sensitive polling stations so that the voters can fearlessly vote in the Assembly election slated in year end.

According to sources, nearly 8,000 polling booths in Rajasthan have been identified as sensitive and extra force would be deployed there during the Assembly elections. The highly sensitive constituencies fall in the eastern parts of the state, especially Dausa, Karauli, Dholpur and Bharatpur. On an average five personnels of security forces including central forces have been directed to be deployed at each sensitive booth, the officials toldAt highly sensitive booths, the election authorities would be doing videography and live web casting to monitor the polling process, said an election official.

It has been learnt that CEO Anand Kumar has instructed the collectors, district election officers (DEO), to ensure deployment of forces to ensure free and fair election.

Apart from deploying security forces at sensitive polling booths, the election authorities are also relying on technology to keep a vigil on violation of code of conduct ahead of the polling date.

The ECI (election commission of India) recently launched mobile application ‘C-Vigil’, downloading which any citizen can report about violation of code of conduct.

According to sources, the election authorities have failed to act enough against violators in the absence of evidence like photos or videos. Hence, with this new application such issues would be sorted out and the election authorities will act in fast track mode on the complaints related to violation of code of conduct.

Using this Android-based app a person can secretly send geo-tagged videos and photos of illegal money being distributed or a hate speeches being made during the polls.

The ‘cVIGIL’, which stands for ‘citizens’ vigil’, under pilot project will be used for the first time in Assembly polls slated in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh this year.

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Live: PM Modi To Launch Several Projects In Odisha, Chhattisgarh Today

Modi in Chhattisgarh Live Updates: PM  Modi reiterates promise of housing for all by 2022.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi today launched a series of developmental projects including an airport in Jharsuguda of Odisha during his visit to the state.

 

Prime Minister Narendra Modi today launched a series of development projects including an airport in Jharsuguda of Odisha during his visit to the state. Inaugurating a new airport at Jharsuguda, he said that it will attract investors to the mineral-rich area and will act as a lifeline in the western region of the state. The PM also laid the foundation stone for a Rs 13,000 crore-project to revive the Talcher fertiliser plant. He exuded confidence that the plant will begin production in the stipulated 36 months. The fertiliser plant will for the first time see coal being converted into gas for use as feedstock and for producing neem-coated urea.

He also inaugurated the Garjanbahal open cast mine of Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd (MCL), which has coal block reserves of 230 million tonne with an annual production capacity of 13 million tonne. It will generate direct employment opportunity for 894 people and indirect job opportunities for 5,000.The PM also launched the 53.1-km long Jharsuguda-Serdega railway line constructed by the MCL. Modi also dedicated to the nation Dulanga Coal Mining Project of NTPC in Sundargarh district. This is the second mine of the state-run company to be operational and its first in Odisha.

From here, the PM left for neighbouring poll-bound Chhattisgarh where he laid the foundation stone for several development projects. Addressing a public meeting in Janjgir-Champa, he virtually kicked off the election campaign for the BJP saying “people of the state are mature enough to elect a stable government”. He said that the only objective of the BJP-led governments at the Centre and in Chhattisgarh were the welfare of the poor and the common people.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will visit Odisha and poll-bound Chhattisgarh today. He will launch several projects in both states, his office has said.

He will unveil a plaque to mark the commencement of work for the revival of Talcher fertilizer plant in Odisha. This is the first plant in India to have a coal gasification based fertilizer unit. In addition to fertilizer, the plant will produce natural gas, which will contribute to the country’s energy requirements, the statement said.

PM Modi will then travel to Jharsuguda to inaugurate an airport there. It will bring western Odisha on the aviation map of India, and facilitate regional air connectivity through the UDAN scheme, it said.

The prime minister will dedicate the Garjanbahal coal mines, and the Jharsuguda-Barapali-Sardega rail link to the nation. He will also unveil a plaque to mark the commencement of coal production and transportation from Dulanga coal mines.

He will then arrive in Chhattisgarh’s Janjgir-Champa district at around 3:20 pm, where he will visit an exhibition on traditional handloom and agriculture. He will lay the foundation stone for national highway projects and the Pendra-Anuppur third railway line.

The prime minister will also address a Kisan Sammelan between 3:30 pm and 4:30 pm.

“The PM will lay foundation stone for the Rs. 1697.79 crore Bilaspur-Anuppur Third Rail Track Project in Bilaspur-Anuppur section of South East Central Railway. The 152 km rail route runs for 119.55 km in Chhattisgarh and 32.45 km in Madhya Pradesh,” an official said.

This track will not only ease passenger services but also augment coal transportation of SECL for its mines in Raigarh and Mand areas, the official added.

Chief Minister Raman Singh, Union Minister of Road Transport and Highways Nitin Gadkari, Union Minister of State for Steel Vishnu Deo Sai will be present on the occasion.

The chief minister extended his gratitude to the prime minister for the visit and said it was his sixth visit to the state in four years, a measure of the priority he gave to development of the state.

The prime minister will depart from Janjgir-Champa by helicopter at 4:50 pm and land at Swami Vivekananda Airport in Raipur at 5:40 pm. He will then proceed to New Delhi at 5:45 pm,  the official informed.

‘Shiv Bhakt’ Rahul ‘s second MP tour from today as Part of Congress’s Soft-Hindutva Approach

As the assembly and general elections are drawing closer, the top leaders have reopened their travel diaries with a ‘voter-friendly’ itinerary. From embarking on pilgrimage to reaching out to minorities and Dalit, the political parties are leaving no stone unturned to woo their potential voters.

Among them is Congress president Rahul Gandhi, who recently seems to be pushing his party’s ‘soft-Hindutva’ stand. After pilgrimage to Mansarovar and and his visit to Amethi as ‘Shiv Bhakt’, the Congress president is set to embark on a two-day visit to Madhya Pradesh on Thursday.

Gandhi’s MP trip is a part of Congress’s Sankalp Yatra, which is in its second leg. He would first visit Chitrakoot, situated on the MP-UP border, to seek blessings at Kamtanath temple, following which he will fly to Satna and address a mega rally before arriving in Rewa to visit rural areas of the district on Friday.

The Congress president’s visit comes two days after Prime Minister Narendra Modi held a mega show of strength of party workers in Bhopal.

The party leaders were busy in full-scale preparations for their president’s visit. Chitrakoot holds special place in Congress scheme of things as the party had announced to undertake Ram-Van-Gaman-Path journey — the mythological route lord Ram undertook during his exile.

The journey was supposed to be launched on September 23 but was deferred due to unknown reasons. However, with the confirmation of Congress president’s arrival in the state, MPCC president Kamal Nath has once again raked up the issue of Ram-Van-Gaman-Path (Ayodhya to Chitrakoot). “CM Shivraj has announced Rs 33 cr Ram-Van-Gaman-Path project but could only set aside Rs 1,000 for the same in three years. This exposes their faith in lord Ram,” he said.

Congress has already announced to complete the project once it comes to power.

Meanwhile this would be Gandhi’s third visit to MP starting with Mandsaur where the Amethi MP had held a public meeting on the anniversary of police firing on farmers, in the month of June.

More than being an election campaign, Gandhi’s visit is now eagerly awaited in MP’s political circles as PM Modi, during his speech at Bhopal, had launched a blistering attack on Congress. Commenting on the persistent electoral losses of the Congress, PM Modi had attacked the opposition, party saying that despite having an army of veteran leaders, the party’s existence is hard to find even under a microscope.

Besides, as a part of his election campaign ahead of MP assembly polls, Gandhi is expected to visit Jabalpur, Indore and Ujjain next. “Rahul Gandhi is expected to visit Jabalpur on October 5, Indore and Ujjain on Oct 15 and 16,” said a Congress leader in Bhopal.

Like it happened in Bhopal early this month, Gandhi would hold a puja (of river Narmada) before kicking off his roadshow in Jabalpur. On September 17, Gandhi had set out on a roadshow in Bhopal after seeking blessings of 11 Hindu priests. Posters calling Gandhi a Shiv-bhakt had also sprung up on city roads.

Meanwhile, Deepak Babaria, the AICC general secretary in charge of MPCC, on Wednesday visited Jabalpur and held discussions with the partymen regarding party chief’s proposed visit.

K Chandrasekhar Rao will remain Telangana CM, Harish & I will play golf: KTR

HYDERABAD: He believes that before every election, all political parties become ‘noisy’ — referring to the infighting over party tickets — and that TRS is no exception, though there is no discontentment in the pink party. As his phone rings endlessly and obviously so, this suave politico believes that rabble-rousing, name calling and stooping to the same level as the opponent, on twitter that is — is part and parcel of every election.

‘‘In a T-20 cricket match, does the batsman play all the overs in a similar manner ? Sometimes he hits hard, some times slow and now that it is election time, you will only see the politician in me though I am otherwise a charming man. But our real campaign is yet to begin,’’ says KT Rama Rao, the IT  Minister of Telangana.

‘‘You don’t drive a wedge between me and Harish,’’ he quips when asked whether KTR would work under the Chief Ministership of T Harish Rao, in case that were to happen. Recently, Harish had declared that he was ready to work under KTR. ‘‘I want KCR garu to be the Chief Minister of the state for the next 15 years and who knows, Harish might retire before that ! Or may be I will retire and both of us (Harish and himself) could play golf together,’’ he laughs.

In a free-wheeling two-hour long exclusive interview to Express over a few cups of green tea, Rama Rao asserts that the TRS has always scripted history and they will sweep the polls even as he refers to Congress leaders — right from its president Rahul Gandhi to the local leadership — as a ‘bunch of jokers’ who are out  to grab power by hook or crook.

‘‘I respect what Harish said. But it is silly to talk all that as KCR garu is only 65 and in the best of health and I want him to continue as CM for the next 15 years. By the way, the CM post is not vacant,’’ says Rama Rao, the shrewd politician in him, taking the centre stage.

But the 42-year-old turns nostalgic as he goes back to history of the Telangana agitation, right from early 1900s to the 1968 movement when he points out that the then Congress government killed 369 youths and today the same party is talking about doing social justice.

‘‘These jokers do not have the moral right to make any tall claims. Now is the time for them to take the bull by its horns but they are jittery.’’

So what was the reason for the state to go in for early polls ? ‘‘The Congress wants to somehow stall all development works we had undertaken. They filed 186 cases against irrigation projects. I have no problem if they seek justice through the Courts. But since they want power at any cost, they are resorting to all other means to stall important works. They were making  baseless allegations and went to the extent of body shaming even my children. We figured that the only way to stop this from getting more murkier is to seek fresh mandate.’’

The “saga of betrayal’’ of the people of Telangana by the Congress is before everyone to see and so is TDP Chief and Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu’s repeated obstacles to construction of irrigation projects in Telangana. The people of Telangana have got an opportunity now to kill “the two birds with one stone (vote),’’ IT and Industries Minister KT Rama Rao has said.

“Both Congress and TDP, which ruled the State one after the other for 67 years, had utterly failed to provide potable water, power and other amenities to people. Such parties have now joined hands to grab power. People should be wary of their designs and seize the opportunity of elections to kill two birds with one stone,” he said.

Rama Rao averred that the TRS would script history by winning 100 Assembly seats in the forthcoming elections.
Pooh-poohing the Congress-led grand alliance as a bundle of contradictions, he said, “The bunch will crumble under its own weight.”

Here are the excerpts from the interview:

interviewer: How do you view the formation of grand alliance by TDP, Congress?
KTR:  I would like to ask Prof M Kodandaram why he is allying with Congress which was responsible for the death of 369 youths during the agitation in 1969. Also, was it not Congress that was responsible for deaths of hundreds of students after 2001? The parties which murdered youths and made them martyrs are now talking about them. It is shameful. Which martyr’s family has asked Kodandaram to sail with Congress and TDP? The grand alliance literally had no agenda except to grab power. Now, PM Narendra Modi  is talking about “Congress-mukt Bharat”. But NT Rama Rao founded TDP way back in 1982 on the same plank. How can TDP sail with Congress?

TNIE:   The grand alliance is coming out with an agenda. What is your take on this?
KTR: What is the basis for forming the grand alliance except for dislodging the TRS and grabbing power? The Congress-TDP combine sees early polls as a golden opportunity to dislodge TRS.

interviewer: But Congress leaders are talking about corruption in TRS government…
KTR: There is no capable leader in Congress for post of chief minister. Currency notes of the value of Rs2.5 crore were burnt in a Congress leader’s car during 2004 electioneering (N Uttam Kumar Reddy). One working president is involved in vote-for-note case (A Revanth Reddy). Another leader is involved in human trafficking case (T Jaya Prakash Reddy). That party (Congress) talking about corruption is a big joke.  If there is corruption in TRS government, the opposition parties can knock the doors of courts.

interviewer: What is your main poll plank?
KTR: Apart from KCR’s face, the TRS’ main election plank will be good governance and good work.  We have provided good governance. Done exceptionally good work. These are our poll planks. Telangana is number one in welfare programmes. The developmental schemes will help us get votes.  The TRS government has done exceptionally well in “Nidhulu (funds), Neellu (water) and Niyamakalu (employment)”, on which Telangana statehood movement hinged.

interviewer: The Congress is alleging that the TRS government failed to provide employment. What is your reaction?
KTR:  Because of Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao, the State got new zonal system which reserved 95% jobs to locals. In its 10-year rule from 2004 to 2014, Congress filled 10,000 jobs in government sector. In the last four years of TRS rule, we have filled 40,000 posts and issued notifications for another 60,000. Congress was responsible for unemployment in the State.

interviewer: K Chandrasekhar Rao vowed not to seek votes if Mission Bhagiratha was not completed before elections. What is the status of the scheme?
KTR:  It will be completed before elections. Around 90% work is complete. The rest will be completed by the time elections are held. As for water, the government undertook Mission Bhagiratha to provide potable water to every household. It took 40 years for the previous governments to complete Sriram Sagar project. We put irrigation projects on the fast track and are all set to complete Kaleshwaram in just four years. As regards funds, Telangana has always been fund-surplus. Telangana funds were used for AP in the past. Now, Telangana is the fastest-growing state in the country. Its growth rate is 17.17%.

interviewer: There has been criticism that  TRS supremo K Chandrasekhar Rao is not going to the Secretariat. You claim yours is good governance…
KTR: Good government does not mean that an ordinary person should be able to meet the chief minister for the sake of a ration card. Every citizen in the State is getting his/her requirements met without meeting the CM.

interviewer: Have you spoken with Harish Rao after his recent emotional outburst?
KTR: Harish Rao himself issued a clarification the very next day. Leave it at that. You cannot drive a wedge between Harish Rao and KTR.

interviewer: How are your relations with BJP? TRS is alleged to have hidden agenda with BJP
KTR: There is no hidden agenda or friendship with BJP. We (BJP and TRS) are diametrically opposite.

interviewer:  In the recent bus accident in Jagtial, 61 people died and there was criticism that KCR did not visit the place or the injured, but had earlier been seen consoling the members of the family of Harikrishna who died in another road accident.
KTR: The chief minister was down with viral fever. I had gone to Jagtial and so did other leaders. To draw comparisons between the two instances is unfair.

interviewer: You and KCR seem to be very busy pacifying all those who were denied ticket to contest elections.
KTR: There is no discontent and all of our leaders are campaigning across the state. It is natural everyone wants to contest on behalf of a party that is going to win elections. In fact, we had expected more. Just wait and watch the fate of Gandhi Bhavan once they announce their list. The windowpanes will be smashed, their leaders will stage dharna and there will be hungama.

interviewer: There is an old CBI case against KCR pertaining to 2006 when he served as Union Minister for Labour and Employment and there were alleged irregularities in the award of contracts of civil works in ESI hospitals which allegedly caused a loss of Rs6 crore to the government, The CBI had even questioned Rao in October 2015.
KTR: KCR garu is not afraid of CBI nor any political party in the country. Opposition has nothing to hold against us in the 18 years of TRS existence. It is an achievement.

interviewer: Congress says that even Harish Rao’s name figures in 2005 enquiry report of CID in human trafficking case.
KTR: The opposition can approach the court or meet the DGP. If Harish was involved, what did the Congress government do for nine years ? They dont have a shred of evidence.’

interviewer: Is the Federal Front on the back-burner for now?
KTR: Federal Front was born out of the angst of the common man and KCR garu is looking for an alternative to bring about a qualitative change in the country. After 71 years of Independence, many still do not have access to clean drinking water. Many villages are still without electricity.

interviewer: What is your view on triple talaq?
KTR: I have not followed this issue much.

TNIE: Your party leaders are talking against AP Chief N Chandrababu Naidu. But, KCR invited Naidu for his Ayutha Chandi Yagam. What is this contradiction.
KTR: Invitation to Yagam is a courtesy. We differ on several issues with Naidu. He wrote several letters to Union government for stopping construction of irrigation projects. Even PM Narendra Modi met the then Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. It does not mean that Pakistan and India have no issues. But, I am not comparing AP and TS with India and Pakistan.

interviewer: What went wrong with the Pragathi Nivedana Sabha? It is said that you were tasked with mobilising a crowd of 25 lakh people but only four to five lakh people turned up. Comparisons are being drawn between the organising skills of you and T Harish Rao?
KTR: Do you know how many lakhs attended? It was a grand success and lakhs of people attended it and let us leave it at that.

Ahead Of Elections, Campaign Of Communal Rhetoric In Rajasthan’s Alwar

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Alwar has repeatedly been in the national headlines in the past two years for lynchings in the name of the cow. Pehlu Khan was murdered in 2017 and more recently, Rakbar Khan died in custody; both men were accused of cattle smuggling.

ALWAR, RAJASTHAN: “Cow blood has been shed on this land, on my land. Russian and American scientists, after studying Hindu shastras, have confirmed that whenever and wherever cow blood is spilt, there will be earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanoes will erupt” – Gyan Dev Ahuja, a BJP lawmaker in Rajasthan’s Alwar, delivers the little speech without flinching as he campaigns for elections in the state due later this year.

Alwar has repeatedly been in the national headlines in the past two years for lynchings in the name of the cow. Pehlu Khan was murdered in 2017 and more recently, Rakbar Khan died in custody; both men were accused of cattle smuggling.

Alarmed, the Supreme Court has repeatedly asked state governments to rein in cow vigilantism.

“We don’t have any problems with Parsis, why do we have problems with Muslims? If they blend like sugar into water there will be no trouble. If they stop cutting up the cow, there will be no problem,” said Gyan Dev Ahuja, with a theatrical twirl of his handle-bar moustache.

A large section of Mr Ahuja’s election machinery comprises members of gaurakshak (cow vigilante) groups, like Dharmendra Singh from the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP), an outfit affiliated to the ruling BJP’s ideological mentor Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).

Mr Ahuja’s protege Banwari Lal Singhal is the BJP lawmaker representing Alwar city. Also a staunch VHP member, Mr Singhal’s latest campaign focuses around his claim that Rakbar Khan did not die in police custody but committed suicide, despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

“The gaurakshaks sent him (Rakbar) peacefully to the police station, even the police did nothing. I think he knew he was guilty so he himself consumed poison,”

Mr Singhal cursorily lists some development projects he has commissioned before launching into details of his campaigns against Muslims.

“The Muslims have made cow their vyavasaya (business)…They will not stop cutting up our mother and eating her. Gaurakshak groups help the police, they are doing social service,” he said.

In the last assembly election in 2013, the BJP won nine of Alwar’s 11 assembly seats. In the 2014 national election, the party won the Alwar Lok Sabha seat.

But in a by-election this year, the Congress did well, winning back the Lok Sabha seat.

Analysts say Hindu-Muslim polarisation is one way that BJP leaders may see as a way of regaining lost ground.

Alwar falls in the Mewat region, which has a high percentage of Muslims, known as Mev Muslims.

Far more pressing issues like water scarcity ought to take centrestage. Ramgarh, Mr Ahuja’s seat, is an extension of an arid region which spills over from Haryana into parts of Rajasthan. But water scarcity or crop procurement prices – another important issue – barely get a mention.

The climate of hate “leaves us feeling very vulnerable and scared, especially as elections near,” says Farman Ali, a Mev Muslim and the owner and director of one of Alwar’s most popular coaching institutes located in the heart of the city.

“Outside every home here you will see cows. We Mevs depend on cattle, depend on dairy but now people are so scared they will not even take a sick cow to the doctor because of the fear of getting lynched,”.

 

Disclaimer: RSS has been taken from their official website.

Chhattisgarh elections: The interesting case of Kanker district

The central Indian state of Raipur will go to the Assembly elections later this state. The state, which was carved out of Madhya Pradesh in 2000, has been under the rule of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) since 2003. Led by Chief Minister Raman Singh, the saffron party is trying hard to win its fourth consecutive term and the top leadership is also sparing no effort to make it happen.

An interesting story of Chhattisgarh elections is that of Kanker, the southern district which is located near the Bastar region. Rich in natural resources, Kanker district has three Assembly constituencies and all of them are reserved for Scheduled Tribes (ST). After delimitation, the number of Assembly seats in Kanker district increased from two to three with Antagarh becoming the third. Earlier, the BJP had the two seats under their belt but in 2013, the Congress won two of the three seats with only Antagarh going to the ruling party.

However, Kanker is often in the news for the 2014 by-election in Antagarh where the Congress candidate Manturam Pawar withdrew in the last minute to give the BJP victory. In 2014, the Antagarh Assembly seat fell vacant after BJP’s Vikram Usendi won from Kanker Lok Sabha seat and there was a need for a by-election. The BJP fielded Bhojraj Nag and he won by a margin of over 53,000 votes. NOTA (None of The Above) finished second with 13,556 votes which was more than Ambedkarite Party of India’s Roopdhar Pando (12,285).

Congress candidate in by-election withdrew in the last moment :

The withdrawal of Pawar had stunned his own partymen and he was expelled from the party. The Congress had alleged that a conspiracy was hatched to make Pawar give up his candidature. There were also reports that spoke about telephonic conversations purportedly between several influential people and also Pawar and they led to continued blame games between the political opponents.

BJP & Congress seats and vote shares in Kanker district constituencies

While the BJP had both Assembly seats in Kanker before delimitation, it won all three seats in the 2008 elections after Antagarh came into existence. In these seats, the BJP won 47 per cent of the vote-share in the district in 2003; 43 per cent in 2008 and 41 per cent in the 2013 Assembly elections.

The Congress, on the other hand, could win 33 per cent of vote share in Kanker district in 2003 though it had no seats. In 2008, its vote share decreased to 31 per cent while it continued to be seat-less. In 2013, as the Congress got two seats in Kanker, its vote share jumped to 45 per cent which is even better than the BJP’s show in 2008 when it won all three seats in the district.

Chhattisgarh election: Mayawati announces alliance with Ajit Jogi’s party

In a major blow to Congress-led Grand Alliance for the upcoming 2019 Lok Sabha Polls, Bahujan Samaj Party supremo and former Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Mayawati on Thursday decided to contest the upcoming assembly polls in alliance with Janta Congress Chhattisgarh.

In a press conference, Mayawati said, “BSP will fight on 35 seats and Janta Congress Chhattisgarh will contest on 55 seats.”

Mayawati also said that if we will be able to win than Ajit Jogi will be Chief Minister of Chhattisgarh.

Jogi, the first Chief Minister of Chattisgarh had formed Janta Congress Chhattisgarh party after being expelled from the Congress in 2016.

While addressing the media Jogi said, “BJP has been in power in Chhattisgarh for past 15 years and it has misused power. Mayawati and my party will together definitely stop the BJP.”

A few days back on September 16 Mayawati commenting on the alliance with other political parties for the upcoming 2019 Lok Sabha polls Mayawati had said, “We will agree to alliance anywhere and in any election only when we get a respectable share of seats, otherwise BSP will contest alone.”

There were speculations that BSP will join Congress-led Grand Alliance for the upcoming 2019 elections to stop the ‘Modi wave’.